Go Back   Offshore Sport Betting - TheEdge > Online Poker and casinos
User Name
Password

Online Poker and casinos All online poker and casino information can be found here.
Freerolls hosted by The Edge will be announced here.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes

  #1 (permalink)  
Old September 15th, 2006, 17:47
iamkidpoker's Avatar
iamkidpoker iamkidpoker is offline
poker and casino expert
 

Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 2,331
Default Up against short stacks in NL holdem

Players on a short stack can be some of your most frustrating opponents in no limit, simply because the complex style of play you have developed is pretty much useless against people without a lot of money in front of them. No limit is largely about the threat of taking someone's money; when an opponent is short, that threat is small or nonexistent, since they have little to lose. A brief overview of some adjustments you have to consider making when you're in a hand with a short stack [especially if you're heads up]:

1) Forget about fancy raising plays with draws. Raising with draws, checkraising with draws, betting the turn after you call the flop and your opponent checks - forget all of them. If your opponent has any type of reasonable hand and is short stacked, chances are you'll be called - and almost all of the above mentioned moves are only successful because of the decent potential for you to take down the pot with just the bet.

2) Tighten up preflop against raises from the short stack. Especially with smaller drawing hands, just fold to preflop raises. Drawing hands are basically useless against a player who is likely to move all in on the flop. Stick to pairs and big cards, and don't be afraid to reraise with these hands to isolate the short stack if they've been pulling the same trick a lot in recent rounds.

3) Bluffing isn't going to work nearly as often. See #1.


4) Don't make the mistake of connecting short stack with bad player. I see a lot of people give loose calls to bets from short stacks that they would never consider making in normal circumstances. The most common scenario goes something like this: Player 'x' has about $85 in a 2-5 NL game and raises to $20 preflop. Everyone folds to Player 'Y' in the BB who calls and flops bottom pair. Player 'Y' Checks, Player 'X' goes all in, and player 'Y' calls like a shot - even though he would almost NEVER call bottom pair at less than 2-1. If you sense a short stack is desperate, fine. But just because someone is low on chips, don't completely abandon your usual calling standards. Short stacks get big pairs with the same frequency as players on large stacks.

5) If you're to the right of a short stack who is tossing around some chips preflop, consider using them for a 'springboard' raise when you hold AA or KK [even QQ - 10 10 and possibly AK works for this as well] in early position. Basically, you open for a smallish raise, enticing the short stack to reraise all in. More often than not, given the phenomenon described in #4, you'll get players after the short stack calling, and then you can come over the top with a massive three bet, either taking down the pot right there or trapping another opponent into a call at unfavorable odds.
Reply With Quote

  #2 (permalink)  
Old September 15th, 2006, 17:49
iamkidpoker's Avatar
iamkidpoker iamkidpoker is offline
poker and casino expert
 

Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 2,331
Default common mistakes with pocket pairs in NL holdem

One of the key differences between limit hold 'em and no limit poker is that the intrinsic value of certain preflop hands change dramatically - especially pocket pairs. In NL, pp's are your bread and butter, the hands you will most often break an opponent with when you make your set. But because of this increased value, players will often overplay pp's, a costly mistake over time. here are some common errors preflop

1) Calling a preflop raise without odds from the raisers stack: when someone with $100 raises $20 preflop, there is only $100 total for you to win from that player should you hit your set. basically you're paying 5-1 for about an 8-1 shot.

2) Calling a large preflop raise when you're unsure if the raiser is willing to commit their stack: pp's are hand meant to break a player when you set. If you're calling large raises, even with odds, from a raiser who often backs off the flop if they miss, you're not getting your odds over time. Look for the tight players who only raise the big pp's.

3) Calling large preflop raises with small pp's against a large field: when UTG or close raises preflop and 4 or more people call in front of you, pp's from 6 down become a tricky hand. You face a real possibility of second best set, or even worse, the losing end of a full house. Throw these hands away and wait.

So play the pp's, but play them smarter. Don't let that target start shootin' back
Reply With Quote

  #3 (permalink)  
Old November 27th, 2006, 06:13
iamkidpoker's Avatar
iamkidpoker iamkidpoker is offline
poker and casino expert
 

Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 2,331
Default

just wanted to bump this article. There is some good info for people who are doing some poker savvy poker rooms.
Reply With Quote
Reply



Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:59.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.0 Beta 5
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.0.0 Betting ForumRakeback
Site Copyright 2008 - The Offshore Edge - offshore sports betting